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Subject: Re: SOMETHING NEW - LGM SCAM | |
Author: TREX | [ Next Thread |
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] Date Posted: Sat, Apr 01 2006, 0:39:25 In reply to: TREX 's message, "SOMETHING NEW - LGM SCAM" on Fri, Dec 02 2005, 2:10:26 hi all LGM victims, firstly i like to apologise as a few of you have emailed me and i did not reply, i was on overseas attachment.from now on, i will promptly reply to all who email me. it is a good idea to file a class action suit but i remember reading somewhere that the court dismiss a class action suit against a timeshare company before. what i understand is the nature of complaint must be same and the way you were deceived must be the same.for example if one LGM victim was deceived by hard selling and had issues with high maint costs, another LGM victim was mis-represented on the cashback offer solely on which he/she sign the contract, they can't file a class action suit together as the nature of complaint is different. i am not a expert, just giving my views. what i suggest is first we must gather all LGM victims and hear their case and then segregate base on main reason of complaint and then each similar group file a class action suit ,all sub-groups can do it with the same lawyer or with different lawyers. i will be replying to all who have emailed me and will also be sending email to those active LGM victims who have posted here .thanks for reading . you can relate this article from straits times with my case above.(first posting above) The Straits Times Interactive MARCH 17, 2004 WED Singapore Charged with cheating 38 in $150,000 timeshare con http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/singapore/story/0,4386,240654,00.html? A MAN has been accused of cheating 38 people out of more than $150,000 by tricking them into believing he could help them sell their timeshare investments. Tan Miah Soong, 43, the former director of International Timeshare Resale Consultant, was charged in a district court yesterday with 73 counts of cheating. He also faces one charge of using the abbreviated form of 'limited' in the name of his business without incorporating it under the Companies Act. Tan, now unemployed, is accused of committing the cheating offences between April 2000 and September last year. He is alleged to have first collected registration fees of between $388 and $776 from the victims, after claiming he could help them sell their timeshares. He purportedly collected larger sums of money from them later, ranging from $1,125 to $13,750, as fees to effect the sale. Tan's case is scheduled for a pre-trial conference on April 1. [ Next Thread | Previous Thread | Next Message | Previous Message ] |